Blockbuster and mom & pop video rental stores hold a special place in most cinephiles' hearts. In the 80s and 90s, video rental stores became the perfect places to hang out and the best way to find movies you had never heard of. Before the internet existed, the only way you could prove your knowledge about B-horror movies and underground sci-fi films was by picking up a summer job at one.

Seeing films inside films is always a fun and nostalgic way to experience the magic of video rental stores all over again. Now that almost all of them are gone and replaced with streaming services, it's worth it to take a step back in time to shelves full of VHS tapes and DVDs.


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Watching the Detectives takes all the fun of 90s video rental stores and puts it into the present. In a nostalgic setting filled with B-movie posters, cardboard character cutouts, and a group of friends to play film trivia with, Cillian Murphy plays Neil, a film noir buff obsessed with the excitement of movies. He spends his days trying to get strangers to sign up for a rental card, so he can steer them down a path of cinema enlightenment.

His life is turned upside down when the beautiful Violet, played by Lucy Liu, waltzes in one day as a modern-day femme fatale. She brings the excitement of movies that Neil lusts over and leads him down a road of petty crime. He realizes that maybe the life of movies is too much to handle.

In one of Nicolas Winding Refn's best films, toxic masculinity bleeds into violence in the life of hard-drinking Leo, played by Kim Bodnia. Leo lives with his long-term girlfriend and spends his days watching gory movies with his lonely video store clerk friend, Lenny (Mads Mikkelsen). Lenny looks the part of a video store clerk, in a graphic tee and grungy military-style jacket and hat. The rental store oozes 90s nostalgia, with shabby carpets and walls lined with the goriest films you can think of.

Air Doll is a unique take on the video rental store movie. The Japanese movie follows a blow-up doll that has been given a soul. Nozomi, played by Bae Doona, wanders around outside her apartment for the first time in wonder. She happens upon a video rental store and is hired to work there, where she falls in love with an employee, Junichi. The scenes inside the rental store are filled with candy-colored shelves and cardboard cutouts of couples in love, symbolizing Nozomi's desires.

Last Action Hero is, without doubt, one of Arnold Schwarzenegger's best movies of the 90s. In it, young Danny becomes obsessed with watching action movies after his father dies, especially those starring the action hero cop, Jack Slater. After a theater manager gives Danny a magic ticket one day, he gets sucked into the big screen as a sidekick to Slater. An evil villain gets a hold of a magic ticket as well though and jumps through the screen into real life, where Danny and Slater must follow.

One of the most memorable scenes of the movie takes place in the 90s-style video rental store. Danny tries to convince Slater that he was the one who starred in movies like Terminator 2: Judgment Day, which is humorously portrayed by Sylvester Stallone on the poster.

Remote Control is all the cheesy goodness you might expect from a sci-fi movie taking place inside a video rental store. Starring Kevin Dillon as Cosmos, the movie follows a video store clerk who stumbles upon an alien plot to take over humanity by brainwashing them with a faux '50s sci-fi movie.

The video resides in the store where Cosmos works. He and his girlfriend must race to stop the aliens before they can distribute the videotapes worldwide. Outside the kooky premise, the best parts of the movie are the sets and costumes. The film is pure 80s new wave style with colorful displays of movies, amazing posters on the wall, huge hair, and tacky, silver tracksuits.

Jack Black is a treasure that brings warmth to every role he plays, but one of his best roles remains Jerry in Be Kind Rewind. The movie is an imaginative and heartfelt letter to days past when movie rental stores ruled America.

While Ghost World doesn't inherently take place in a video store, one of its more memorable scenes does. And the scene is notable because most movies about video stores revolve around male characters and masculine stereotypes.

In the movie, Enid and Rebecca (Thora Birch and Scarlett Johansson), think they are above the rest of the world. Bored with life, their futures, and everything in between, the social outcasts find themselves inside a video rental store at one point where they are uninterested in everything they pass by. It perfectly defines their characters in a visually appealing setting.

Clerks is the quintessential video store movie. It is considered a landmark in independent filmmaking, and it achieved cult film status among movie fans. It also introduced a slew of recurring characters in Kevin Smith's universe, like Jay and Silent Bob.

In EDtv, a cable channel tries to boost its ratings by ushering in a new show that documents someone's life. Ed (Matthew McConaughey) enjoys his life of movies and solitude, until one day that lucky someone is him. The TV series makes him an instant celebrity and wreaks havoc on his personal life with his girlfriend and brother.

The satirical comedy film pokes fun at the rise in reality TV shows at the time but does it in one of the best settings: a video rental store. One of the funniest parts of the movie is Ed's habit of throwing customers out of his store if they don't pay homage to Burt Reynolds.

Speaking Parts revolves around a bit-part actor named Lance (Michael McManus), whose real job is that of a gigolo. One of his female co-workers, Lisa, becomes obsessed with him, and her obsession drives her to rent every movie that he's in at a video store.

The video store isn't just any rental store, it is one of the coolest-looking ones. The outside of it is lit up with a neon sign that illuminates everything in cyan and red. And when Lisa walks in, the place is decorated in black and white checkerboard tiles, sleazy horror posters, lava lamps, and shelves of all the best movies one could ask for.

Kaleidescape disconnected from UltraViolet services on . Kaleidescape will continue to fulfill playback rights for the titles below, which were purchased from other UltraViolet retailers. Note that this list only includes titles which were available for sale on the Kaleidescape store on , and for which Kaleidescape had UltraViolet support. Visit www.myuv.com to see a complete list of all titles in your UltraViolet account.

This report lists all of the special pricing offers for all available qualities based on the owned and cataloged content on this system. 


 It also includes a list of content that is not yet available in our store.

You can replace your cataloged and imported content with downloadable versions available* in the Kaleidescape Movie Store.


 Replacing these movies with downloaded versions has these advantages:

  Once you upgrade your disc to a disc-free digital version, your system will no longer require the disc. Up to 4K quality (requires Strato for playback, see your dealer for upgrade options.) Movies and TV shows can be easily downloaded onto up to five of your Kaleidescape systems. Disc-to-digital discounts exist for upgrading cataloged and imported discs.  

 The Disc to Digital report lists all cataloged and imported content across all of your systems, including a detailed list of upgrade prices* and storage requirements. It also includes some suggested hardware purchase options. 


 *Only movies available for purchase on the Kaleidescape Movie Store can be upgraded.

The Kaleidescape Exhibition Movie Service supports the exhibition of movies at licensed establishments using Kaleidescape Strato systems. Selected movies are downloaded onto Kaleidescape Terra Movie Servers, then transmitted securely over the local network to Kaleidescape Strato players. As movies are played back, reports are automatically generated and shared both with the exhibitor and the studio to enable proper accounting.

A movie that you can update will have an "Update Available" section on its detail sheet. You can view all of your movies with updates by selecting "Movie Updates" under the "Manage" tab on the movie store website.

This means that your Terra server appears to be offline and may be powered off. An active internet connection is required to download movies and maintain playback authorization. Ensure that your Terra server is powered on and is connected to the internet.

The Kaleidescape Marine Movie Service supports yacht installations of Kaleidescape Strato systems. Purchased titles are factory downloaded onto the Strato system, and additional content can be purchased from the Marine Movie Store for delivery to the yacht on portable hard drives; the movies are then transferred to the secure storage of the Kaleidescape system.

If you already have a Kaleidescape Premiere system on your yacht, you can add a Kaleidescape Strato system to use the Marine Movie Service. The Premiere system is then dedicated to disc content and the Strato system is used for movies purchased from the Kaleidescape Marine Movie Store. If the players are paired using Kaleidescape Co-Star switches, then you can see and play all your movies in each playback zone.

When you order more movies from the Marine Movie Service for an existing system, the movies are delivered on one or more portable hard drives. Once you receive these hard drives, you connect them to your Kaleidescape system using a USB cable. There is an initial period during which the Kaleidescape system must be connected to the Internet in order to receive data, delivery instructions, and authorizations for the movies. After that data exchange is complete, the Kaleidescape system may be disconnected from the Internet while the movies are transferred from the hard drive(s) to the Kaleidescape system. ff782bc1db

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